they did have time to snoop on lessons which exceeded the statutory decibel rate.) They set off in pursuit of the errant dog,

skilfully hurdling its poop in the process. They chased it into Mathematics where it caused havoc by lifting a leg

45° towards the blackboard's right-angle. Then through the Audio-Visual concepts room, across the film of Henry V, making Olivier's horse

rear and throw the bewildered actor. It hid behind a smoke-screen in the bogs, sniffed out bunkers in the coal-bunker.

For hours it disappeared and Senior Staff suspected a trendy English teacher of using it as an aid to creative writing.

Finally it was duly discovered by Lizzie Locust (Biology), necking with a stuffed stoat in the store-cupboard.

Now you can see the distraught Headmistress scrubbing form bell to bell in her office, a small dog held down by burly, sweating prefects.

by Mike Jenkins from Invisible Times

Additional information: Just in case some of the words don’t make sense because they’re British words, or slang and euphemisms specific to the South Wales Welsh-English speaking region, here’s a quick breakdown of some of them:

Loopy: strange, odd,
crazy, affected, etc.

Felt-tip: a marker pen,
usually a cheap one meant for kids but it can mean the bigger ones
too.

Nippy: to do something in a fast, quick, spritely, etc, manner e.g. ‘I’m nipping over to the shops do you want anything?’

Shat: the past tense of the verb ‘to shit’. It’s not a proper word as far as I’m aware and ‘shit’ is more or less used as it’s own quasi-infinitive in most cases i.e. ‘he shit himself [yesterday]’, ‘he has [just now] shit himself’, ‘he will shit himself [if he eats that]’.

Backhand cuffs:
backhand hand motions or in this case backhand slaps to pupils or
backhanded admonishment due to frustration at not locating the dog
yet. That thing where teachers take out their frustrations by
speaking passive aggressively towards pupils out of a sense of
personal frustration (when it’s nothing to do with said pupils) as
I’m sure we have all seen in our schooldays.

Snoop: spy, eavesdrop,
etc.

In the bogs: the ‘bogs’ are the toilets… because, at least in my experience, there would be mysterious pools of water on the floor by about 10AM each school day and you could never be certain if they were sink water shaken off of hands or bodily fluids… the smoke screen in the bogs being that it’s where pupils would go to hide when smoking as is no doubt universally the case.

Bunkers: ‘bunking off’, ‘doing a bunk’, etc is the act of not attending class. Skipping class, skiving, but it can also mean playing truant as well though here it’s just the former. The play on words being that people skipping class are in a room intended for storing coal thus both are commonly referred to as ‘bunkers’.

Store – cupboard: A room where school equipment is stored behind a locked door. Usually a small antechamber between two classrooms or a smallroom leading from one classroom like an en suite bathroom but filled with shalves of old textbooks, random items and a prime location for pupils or members of staff to neck on with each other.

Necking: to ‘neck on’ etc involved kissing but implies a more salacious aspect such as groping, french kissing, fondling, etc. Usually done in a place intended to give some privacy but usually easily discovered such as behind the bike sheds or in a storeroom cupboard. ‘Necking on’ being a term often ascribed to teenagers at a party experimenting with such aspects of intimacy.

Prefects: In my experience sixth formers doing something for their school leavers certificate to have extra ‘good citizen’ points when applying for university. Not the Head Boy or Head Girl but given tasks by staff and running or representing various matters for the student body. Compare them to the ‘student council’ in anime for a more commonly known version of this type. I guess though on the whole it’s just teacher’s pets, the (within the school) social elite or those who are already prone to social climbing and a lust for power even at this early an age.